DEMOCRATIC REPUBLIC OF THE CONGO

Summary of SRI in Democratic Republic of the Congo

In 2007 and 2008, Baile Mutambue, an agronomist with the National Rice Program in DRC, reported that SRI methods have been tried for several years in Kinshasa, Mbandaka, Kikwit, Mbanza-Ngungu, and Kisangani and have successfully increased average paddy yields from 1 ton/hectare to 1.5 or 3 tons/hectare. In 2013, the Italian NGO, Mazao, trained farmers in SRI methods in the Tanganyika district of Kalanga province, with experimental fields receiving yields as high as 9 tons/hectare. Also in 2013, the NGO BATIDE collaborated with the National Rice Program and the European Cooperative for Rural Development (EUCORD) to conduct SRI trials in Kingabwa, in the western part of the country, which reported yield increases with SRI of 64-121% with four rice varieities. The project was renewed with phase II running 2015-2018. To the east, in the Ruzizi plain of South Kivu, the Belgian NGO VECO has begun teaching SRI methods to farmers, with photos and results posted on their facebook page. Finally, during 2016, a report from the US-based Woods Hole Research Center describes the onset of a project (Projet Équateur) in the DRC's northern Equateur province to study the possibility of using SRI methods to make use of a degraded swamp area. Mid-2016 project results record tripling of rice yield, though finding labor to construct and work in paddies while converting from slash-and-burn agriculture has slowed SRI adoption; Projet Équateur is hoping to use REDD+ funds to reduce agricultural extensification. During December 2016 and January 2017, the NGO Mazao reported on their success using SRI methods in an economic development project with a sizeable Pygmy population in conflict areas in Kalemie, Tanganyika province.

Progress and Activities

2017 Updates

Phase II of the Kingabwa Rice Intensification Project Makes Progress

[June 2017] The Kingabwa Rice Intensification Project phase II (PIRK II), which began in 2015 and is slated to run until 2018, is a is a continuation of the 2011-2015 Rice Intensification Project funded by USAID.
The project partners are Winrock (lead), BATIDE, National Rice Programme, National Nutrition Programme, Kingabwa Farmers Association and Cooperative.
In the second phase of the project, the European Cooperative fro Rural Development (EUCORD) continues to build on the existing relationship with local NGOs and the private sector partner. The goal is to develop 120 ha of irrigation land in the Malebo pool, demonstrate SRI, and support the development of a brand for Kingabwa rice (“Ngwele” rice) to improve marketing.

The project, which supports 2,000 rice farmers and the surrounding community, has supported the development of several local enterprises, including a woman-led rice seed multiplication business, a composting company and the rice marketing cooperative.
Thus far, the PIRK II project has seen significant improvements to the deteriorated irrigation infrastructure, and an adoption of improved production techniques. The project has levelled 72 ha of land, installed a water pump for controlled irrigation, and established 24 wells for vegetable irrigation. Over 1,200 farmers have received training in intensive rice production techniques, including SRI, and received technology packets. (see EUCORD project description)

"After so much work, the first results can now be seen!"

[January 26, 2017] According to an article in the January 2017 Mazao Newsletter, SRI training in Mazao's SRI Project in Kalemie, D.R. Congo, has led to visible results only two months after sowing: The ears of rice grown from each seed have literally doubled in 80% of fields compared to rice cultivated with traditional techniques. While before the plants accounted for an average of 30 ears, now plants 60-70 ears. Barring any unforeseen events, the farmers are expected to harvest at least 5 tons of rice per hectare. Field staff and farmers have been congratulated!

2016

[December 16, 2016 ] The first phase of the NGO Mazao's Agro-ecological Rice Supply Chain Programme concluded during December 2016. Eighteen hectares of paddy rice were planted in Kampunda using the SRI methods. The Provincial Minister of Social Affairs and the Family lauded the rice program, which is being carried out in partnership with WFP-PAM, for the significant contribution it is making to the local agricultural development and especially to peace and stability of this area.

The Minister refered to the decisive role which the inclusion of Pygmies population in the project (more thanhalf of the 3,160 beneficiaries) has played in building stability in this area. Pygmies involved in the project decided not to join their nearby brothers who recently were involved in fanning the conflict between Bantu and Pygmies.
The will of the Kampunda’s Pygmies to maintain peace is reportedly due to the economic well-being generated through the project's activities. Furthermore, since they have been trained with SRI rice farming, they will be able to replicate the experience in other areas if they decide to move (they are nomads). Mazao believes that the active presence of development agents in the villages with inclusive actions targeted to the improvement of life conditions of vulnerable populations in the long term can actually have a positive impact on the future of these areas. [... read more in the December 2016 Mazao newsletter.]

REDD+ Funds Could Help SRI Become an Important Cost-Effective Strategy
to Reduce Pressue on the Forest

[August 10, 2016] “It has to be cost effective. It’s not about some expensive technology, it’s about appropriateness and cost effectiveness,” says Dr. Glenn Bush, Woods Hole Research Center's (WHRC) Projet Équateur’s principal investigator. The northern province of Équateur is not only the most forested province in the country, but also the poorest; most of the people depend on the forest for their livelihoods. Bush cites SRI as an example of a cost-effective technology used by the project. He notes that, "It's success rate depends on how households manage their labor. New technologies pose a great risk to poor people. And anything that requires even a small outlay of cash is unattainable by many.”
SRI had remarkable impacts with Projet Équateur trials, but it reportedly hasn’t enjoyed much widespread adoption yet, because at key times of the year family members that need to be recruited to weed, or to create a new paddy fiel, they have gone off to work in someone else's field or elsewhere to earn extra cash.
Melaine Kermarc, WHRC's Projet Équateur manager, adds, "It’s also that people are unable to find the labor force necessary to create the paddy in the first place. It’s a huge initial investment. Once the paddy is there though it becomes a great incentive not to go further to deforest because they have regular income or food, with limited amount work in comparison to other crops. If the farming households can’t get to the point where they actually see the benefit, they will be unlikely to adopt a new technology, however promising."

If SRI goes into a community as part of the REDD+ program, the project could use some of the REDD funds to provide incentives for people to stay on their fields, and really adopt SRI, which could triple yield. REDD+ is about combating deforestation, which is due to industrial forestry as well as smallholder agriculture and demand for charcoal. Slash and burn techniques have removed around one million hectares of forest cover in the last twelve years in Équateur Province alone.
Projet Équateur hopes to use from REDD+ and other sources to help these small farmers intensify their agricultural production, by sponsoring the right type of agricultural training along with small rural activities that focus on the direct drivers of deforestation. In order reduce deforestation related to slash-and-burn, which is an "extensification" of agriculture, the WHRC project would like to replace traditional practices with new practices, such as the SRI agricultural intensification model.
[See full WHRC article.]

Woods Hole Research Center Embarks on SRI Promotion with the Project Equateur

[April 9, 2016] Glenn Bush and Melaine Kermarc are managing the SRI component ofWoods Hole Research Center's (WHRC) Projet Equateur, which sought to find alternative methods to slash-and-burn rice farming in the DRC's northern Equateur province. The project used degraded swamp areas to introduce SRI as a wetland rice paddy system. The trial yields were reported to be successful and the project now intends to educate villagers in SRI methods as well as composting, which is an important step in maintaining soil health in the SRI fields. (see details in the WHRC newsletter and the Project Equateur website.)

2013-2015

Kingabwa Project Demonstrates Improved Tillering and Grain Yields with SRI on Four Varieties

[January 2013] Pierre Sassa and Gustave Cileu from the NGO Bureau d’Appui et d’Assistance Technique aux Initiatives de Développement (BATIDE) collaborated with the Programme National Riz to conduct SRI trials in Kingabwa, an area near Kinshasa. The Projet de l'Intensification de Riziculture à Kingabwa (PIRK) received funding from the European Cooperative for Rural Development (EUCORD) and conducted SRI trials from January 1 - May 30 2013. Project trials showed that within 60 days of transplanting rice planted with SRI methods had on average 29 tillers, compared to the 19 tillers found through conventional methods. The full SRI Kingabwa Report is available on the Batide website. The results of the four varieties of rice tested in the Kingabwa trials, which showed 64-121% yielded increases when tested on four varieties, are listed in the table below:

Variety

Yield – SRI(MT/ha)

Yield – conventional(MT/ha)

Yield increase(%)

Hubei 6

8.28

5.04

64%

Jasmine

6.86

3.92

76%

Sipi

5.89

2.66

121%

Nerica-L17

5.12

2.43

110%

Mazao Likilimba of Rice and Social Rice Supply Chain

In June 2013, the Italian NGO Mazao launched the"Likilimba of rice" SRI pilot project in the Tanganyika district, which established a Social Rice Supply Chain (SRSC) with intentions of reducing the gap between smallholder farmers and consumers. The pilot project provided training in SRI methods, which resulted in experimental fields achieving 9 t/h. Farmers participating in the trials increased their rice production from 0.5-1 tons/ha to 5-6 tons/ha. A video produced by Mazao explains their work with the SRSC and their SRI training.

2007-2008

National Rice Program Reports Positive Results with SRI trials

Basile Mutambue, an
agronomist with the National Rice Program, reports that SRI methods have been tried
in the DRC for several years now, with positive results. Average paddy yields are
less than 1 ton/hectare in the country, according to FAO statistics, but with SRI
methods, yields are 1.5 to 3 tons/hectare. The methods are being used in
rice-growing areas around Kinshasa, Mbandaka, Kikwit, Mbanza-Ngungu, and Kisangani.
They were introduced by technicians from China, according to Mutambue.

Mazao. 2016. Forest Food Revolution. Mazao Newsletter, December 2016 issue. [Section on "Mazao’s rice in Kalemie, a success gained on the field" documents how SRI is part of the keeping the peace between the Bantus and the Pygmies.]